Flush tax increase makes up for raids of Bay Restoration Fund, some say

As the lid closes on the 2012 legislative session, lawmakers will likely double the flush tax from $30 to $60 to cover a projected $385 million shortfall in the Bay Restoration Fund, but some lawmakers say the tax hike aims to cover repeated raids on the fund that triggered a downgrade by Moody’s Investor Service 14 months ago.

“It wouldn’t be necessary to double the fee this year had they used the money they collected,” said Del. Jay Jacobs, R-Kent, who voted against tax hike. “And there probably wouldn’t have been a downgrade of the fund.”

The Moody’s report downgraded $44 million in revenues bonds issued on the fund, citing $200 million in cash raids in fiscal 2010 and 2011 as negative contributing factors. The ratings agency warned that more raids could occur in fiscal 2012 because the fund was not protected.

“A statutory restriction that limited the use of the Bay Restoration Fee to water quality purposes was recently changed to permit…transfer to the state’s general fund,” the Moody’s report said. “There’s no guarantee the state… won’t repeat this action.”

An additional $90 million was taken from the fund in fiscal 2012.

The Moody’s report also looked negatively on replacing the cash funds with general obligation bonds.

The state has replaced the cash with $272 million in general obligation bonds and authorized another $530 million in revenue bonds, of which only $50 million has been issued.

CLARIFICATION: “There is a shortfall in the fund because the $2.50 per month fee is not enough to cover the upgrade to all 67 major Wastewater Treatment Plants,” said Samantha Kappalman, communications director at the Department of the Environment. “These upgrades must happen before 2017 to meet our obligation to the total maximum daily load” of nutrients going into the bay.

Revenue bonds issued when cash needed

Environment Secretary Robert Summers said the revenue bonds would be issued when cash is needed.

“The revenue bonds have been obligated against contracts under construction and will be sold in fiscal 2013-2015 to make cash payments,” Summers said in an email.

Issuing the revenue bonds will likely result in higher interest rates because of the Moody’s downgrade.

Gov. Martin O’Malley insisted when he announced the tax hike in January that swapping cash out of the fund with general obligation bonds had not impacted the effectiveness of the fund.

”We swapped for bond dollars,” O’Malley said in January. “In other words, taking the cash but putting back with bond dollars. …There was not a deviation of effort or a bait and switch situation where $10 was supposed to go to [projects] and only $8 did.”

Jacobs believes the raids on the fund have hurt MDE’s ability to perform basic upkeep on the sewage treatment plants. He cited a report from the Maryland Reported Sewer Overflow Database which indicated 2,100 reports of sewerage overflows in 2011 and 94 overflows of 1 million gallons or more.

The Moody’s report said improving the bond rating would require revenue growth into the fund and statutory prohibitions against the state making “further raids on the fund balances.”

Secretary Summers said that a failure to double the flush tax at the state level would likely transfer responsibility to local governments.

“If the fund is not increased, local governments will have to finance the upgrades with local funding, which will in most cases require sewer rate increases,” Summers said in an email.

The bill prohibits reducing the flush tax in future years if bond debt is still outstanding on the fund. The debt on the $530 million in revenue bonds will carry a 15-year maturity once they are issued.

Read Next

Doubling the flush tax to $60 a year is one of the revenue increases Gov. Martin O’Malley proposed Wednesday in his fiscal 2013 budget. Revenue from the tax goes into the Chesapeake Bay Restoration Fund to upgrade sewage treatment plants. Money from septic system users is also used to upgrade some of those systems and pay for cover crops. The new money is needed because the upgrades have cost more than originally estimated.

That is so lame, Ms. Kappalman. MDE is not cashing the bonds that were swapped because of the debt limit, and the higher cost of borrowing because of the downgrade. And when you double the tax, your boss will just sit there and watch more money fly out of the fund next year. It will become a tradition to pass through